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UPPER function problem
I have columns that the user enters x or nothing. Purely for aesthetics I
would like it to auto-capitalize, so I entered the function "=UPPER(+F5)" where F5 is the current cell. What shows is excatly what I just entered: ie., the function! So there are two questions, why do I have the =UPPER etc displaying in the cell and is it the correct use of the function to uppercase the contect in the cell. Excel 2007. Many thanks! Ron |
UPPER function problem
Hi,
the correct syntax is =Upper(f5) Mike "Ron Carr" wrote: I have columns that the user enters x or nothing. Purely for aesthetics I would like it to auto-capitalize, so I entered the function "=UPPER(+F5)" where F5 is the current cell. What shows is excatly what I just entered: ie., the function! So there are two questions, why do I have the =UPPER etc displaying in the cell and is it the correct use of the function to uppercase the contect in the cell. Excel 2007. Many thanks! Ron |
UPPER function problem
Nope. tried it both ways, with and without the +.
Ron "Mike H" wrote: Hi, the correct syntax is =Upper(f5) Mike "Ron Carr" wrote: I have columns that the user enters x or nothing. Purely for aesthetics I would like it to auto-capitalize, so I entered the function "=UPPER(+F5)" where F5 is the current cell. What shows is excatly what I just entered: ie., the function! So there are two questions, why do I have the =UPPER etc displaying in the cell and is it the correct use of the function to uppercase the contect in the cell. Excel 2007. Many thanks! Ron |
UPPER function problem
Hi,
2 possibilites. 1. Most likely. The cell is formatted as text. Reformat as general, tap F2 and Enter 2. You are set to display formulas instead of results. I know how to change this in excel 2003 so you'll have to look in Help for 2007. Mile "Ron Carr" wrote: Nope. tried it both ways, with and without the +. Ron "Mike H" wrote: Hi, the correct syntax is =Upper(f5) Mike "Ron Carr" wrote: I have columns that the user enters x or nothing. Purely for aesthetics I would like it to auto-capitalize, so I entered the function "=UPPER(+F5)" where F5 is the current cell. What shows is excatly what I just entered: ie., the function! So there are two questions, why do I have the =UPPER etc displaying in the cell and is it the correct use of the function to uppercase the contect in the cell. Excel 2007. Many thanks! Ron |
UPPER function problem
You cannot use a formula to change a cell that has something in it.
If F5 has x then the formula =UPPER(F5) in some OTHER cell will display X You seem to want the cell F5 where the user types an x to automatically change to a capital X This would require some VBA code. Are you ready to enter that area of Excel? best wishes -- Bernard V Liengme Microsoft Excel MVP http://people.stfx.ca/bliengme remove caps from email "Ron Carr" wrote in message ... I have columns that the user enters x or nothing. Purely for aesthetics I would like it to auto-capitalize, so I entered the function "=UPPER(+F5)" where F5 is the current cell. What shows is excatly what I just entered: ie., the function! So there are two questions, why do I have the =UPPER etc displaying in the cell and is it the correct use of the function to uppercase the contect in the cell. Excel 2007. Many thanks! Ron |
UPPER function problem
Turns out it is a circular reference since I am reffing to the same cell the
formula is in. I assume that is why the entire formula is showing. Show formulas applies to the whole spreadsheet and other formulas are not showing. I still would like to know how to auto-capitalize this field! Ron "Mike H" wrote: Hi, 2 possibilites. 1. Most likely. The cell is formatted as text. Reformat as general, tap F2 and Enter 2. You are set to display formulas instead of results. I know how to change this in excel 2003 so you'll have to look in Help for 2007. Mile "Ron Carr" wrote: Nope. tried it both ways, with and without the +. Ron "Mike H" wrote: Hi, the correct syntax is =Upper(f5) Mike "Ron Carr" wrote: I have columns that the user enters x or nothing. Purely for aesthetics I would like it to auto-capitalize, so I entered the function "=UPPER(+F5)" where F5 is the current cell. What shows is excatly what I just entered: ie., the function! So there are two questions, why do I have the =UPPER etc displaying in the cell and is it the correct use of the function to uppercase the contect in the cell. Excel 2007. Many thanks! Ron |
UPPER function problem
read my message
-- Bernard V Liengme Microsoft Excel MVP http://people.stfx.ca/bliengme remove caps from email "Ron Carr" wrote in message ... Turns out it is a circular reference since I am reffing to the same cell the formula is in. I assume that is why the entire formula is showing. Show formulas applies to the whole spreadsheet and other formulas are not showing. I still would like to know how to auto-capitalize this field! Ron "Mike H" wrote: Hi, 2 possibilites. 1. Most likely. The cell is formatted as text. Reformat as general, tap F2 and Enter 2. You are set to display formulas instead of results. I know how to change this in excel 2003 so you'll have to look in Help for 2007. Mile "Ron Carr" wrote: Nope. tried it both ways, with and without the +. Ron "Mike H" wrote: Hi, the correct syntax is =Upper(f5) Mike "Ron Carr" wrote: I have columns that the user enters x or nothing. Purely for aesthetics I would like it to auto-capitalize, so I entered the function "=UPPER(+F5)" where F5 is the current cell. What shows is excatly what I just entered: ie., the function! So there are two questions, why do I have the =UPPER etc displaying in the cell and is it the correct use of the function to uppercase the contect in the cell. Excel 2007. Many thanks! Ron |
UPPER function problem
You can't do what you want with formulas. Think about it for a moment... if
you have a formula in a cell and your user types something in that cell, whatever they type will replace the formula. As Bernard pointed out, what you want to do will require some VB coding. Give this a try. Right click the tab at the bottom of the worksheet containing the columns you want to have this functionality and select View Code from the popup menu that appears, then copy/paste the following code into the code window that appeared... Private Sub Worksheet_Change(ByVal Target As Range) Dim X As Long Dim Text As String Dim Cols() As String Const UpperCaseColumns As String = "A,B,E,H" Cols = Split(UpperCaseColumns, ",") For X = 0 To UBound(Cols) Cols(X) = Trim(Cols(X)) & ":" & Trim(Cols(X)) Next Text = Join(Cols, ",") If Not Intersect(Target, Range(Text)) Is Nothing Then On Error GoTo Whoops Application.EnableEvents = False Target.Value = UCase(Target.Value) End If Whoops: Application.EnableEvents = True End Sub You didn't tell us which columns. As written, the code will upper case any text entered into Columns A, B, E and H. If you want different columns to have this functionality, just modify the list to in the Const UpperCaseColumns statement to show your column letters in a comma delimited listing as my sample shows. Once you have finished, any entries made to the columns you specified will automatically be turned into upper case letters. -- Rick (MVP - Excel) "Ron Carr" wrote in message ... Turns out it is a circular reference since I am reffing to the same cell the formula is in. I assume that is why the entire formula is showing. Show formulas applies to the whole spreadsheet and other formulas are not showing. I still would like to know how to auto-capitalize this field! Ron "Mike H" wrote: Hi, 2 possibilites. 1. Most likely. The cell is formatted as text. Reformat as general, tap F2 and Enter 2. You are set to display formulas instead of results. I know how to change this in excel 2003 so you'll have to look in Help for 2007. Mile "Ron Carr" wrote: Nope. tried it both ways, with and without the +. Ron "Mike H" wrote: Hi, the correct syntax is =Upper(f5) Mike "Ron Carr" wrote: I have columns that the user enters x or nothing. Purely for aesthetics I would like it to auto-capitalize, so I entered the function "=UPPER(+F5)" where F5 is the current cell. What shows is excatly what I just entered: ie., the function! So there are two questions, why do I have the =UPPER etc displaying in the cell and is it the correct use of the function to uppercase the contect in the cell. Excel 2007. Many thanks! Ron |
UPPER function problem
OK I will try the code, just for kicks.
I have been writing a lot of VBA in Access but never tried in Excel etc.. Time to learn! Thanks. Ron "Rick Rothstein" wrote: You can't do what you want with formulas. Think about it for a moment... if you have a formula in a cell and your user types something in that cell, whatever they type will replace the formula. As Bernard pointed out, what you want to do will require some VB coding. Give this a try. Right click the tab at the bottom of the worksheet containing the columns you want to have this functionality and select View Code from the popup menu that appears, then copy/paste the following code into the code window that appeared... Private Sub Worksheet_Change(ByVal Target As Range) Dim X As Long Dim Text As String Dim Cols() As String Const UpperCaseColumns As String = "A,B,E,H" Cols = Split(UpperCaseColumns, ",") For X = 0 To UBound(Cols) Cols(X) = Trim(Cols(X)) & ":" & Trim(Cols(X)) Next Text = Join(Cols, ",") If Not Intersect(Target, Range(Text)) Is Nothing Then On Error GoTo Whoops Application.EnableEvents = False Target.Value = UCase(Target.Value) End If Whoops: Application.EnableEvents = True End Sub You didn't tell us which columns. As written, the code will upper case any text entered into Columns A, B, E and H. If you want different columns to have this functionality, just modify the list to in the Const UpperCaseColumns statement to show your column letters in a comma delimited listing as my sample shows. Once you have finished, any entries made to the columns you specified will automatically be turned into upper case letters. -- Rick (MVP - Excel) "Ron Carr" wrote in message ... Turns out it is a circular reference since I am reffing to the same cell the formula is in. I assume that is why the entire formula is showing. Show formulas applies to the whole spreadsheet and other formulas are not showing. I still would like to know how to auto-capitalize this field! Ron "Mike H" wrote: Hi, 2 possibilites. 1. Most likely. The cell is formatted as text. Reformat as general, tap F2 and Enter 2. You are set to display formulas instead of results. I know how to change this in excel 2003 so you'll have to look in Help for 2007. Mile "Ron Carr" wrote: Nope. tried it both ways, with and without the +. Ron "Mike H" wrote: Hi, the correct syntax is =Upper(f5) Mike "Ron Carr" wrote: I have columns that the user enters x or nothing. Purely for aesthetics I would like it to auto-capitalize, so I entered the function "=UPPER(+F5)" where F5 is the current cell. What shows is excatly what I just entered: ie., the function! So there are two questions, why do I have the =UPPER etc displaying in the cell and is it the correct use of the function to uppercase the contect in the cell. Excel 2007. Many thanks! Ron |
UPPER function problem
Hello! This is exactly what I'm looking for as well! Thank you for writing this code. However, I pasted it into the window as instructed, and nothing happens in the Excel sheet. I understand how to limit the columns, but I'm not sure how to execute the code... Please help! *** Sent via Developersdex http://www.developersdex.com *** |
UPPER function problem
Did you paste the code into the sheet module?
Do you have that sheet activated when entering text? Code is executed when you type some text into any cell in the designated column(s) Gord Dibben MS Excel MVP On Sun, 01 Mar 2009 21:59:11 -0800, Michael Bean wrote: Hello! This is exactly what I'm looking for as well! Thank you for writing this code. However, I pasted it into the window as instructed, and nothing happens in the Excel sheet. I understand how to limit the columns, but I'm not sure how to execute the code... Please help! *** Sent via Developersdex http://www.developersdex.com *** |
UPPER function problem
Gord-
Thannks, I understand now; it works on new text, but not on old text. I was expecting it to execute the code on pre-existing text as well. (I followed the instructions and pasted as described, I don't know about activating the sheet, but it is doing what it's meant to do.) I work with a database which exports an Excel address list file, and the text needs to be changed to all caps before printing the labels. I had to manually retype each field. This code now allows me to click each field then click the text and it becomes all caps. Now if it could be automated! I considered writing my own app to do it from the desktop, but it would be best if it could be done right in Excel. Unfortunately, I don't know much about VBA. Michael *** Sent via Developersdex http://www.developersdex.com *** |
UPPER function problem
We thought you wanted the text UPPERED as you typed it in but I see you have
a different need. To change all pre-existing text to UPPER, run this macro on your selected cells. Sub Upper() Dim Cell As Range Application.ScreenUpdating = False For Each Cell In Selection Cell.Formula = UCase(Cell.Formula) Next Application.ScreenUpdating = True End Sub Gord On Mon, 02 Mar 2009 12:07:56 -0800, Michael Bean wrote: Gord- Thannks, I understand now; it works on new text, but not on old text. I was expecting it to execute the code on pre-existing text as well. (I followed the instructions and pasted as described, I don't know about activating the sheet, but it is doing what it's meant to do.) I work with a database which exports an Excel address list file, and the text needs to be changed to all caps before printing the labels. I had to manually retype each field. This code now allows me to click each field then click the text and it becomes all caps. Now if it could be automated! I considered writing my own app to do it from the desktop, but it would be best if it could be done right in Excel. Unfortunately, I don't know much about VBA. Michael *** Sent via Developersdex http://www.developersdex.com *** |
UPPER function problem
Gord-
Perfect! Thank you so much! I ran your code and my Excel sheet is in all CAPS now! In case other readers want a concise explanation, here's how I used the code with the instructions from earlier in this post. I hope this is correct: -Copy the code shown in Gord's post. -Select the cells you want to become all caps. DON'T USE CTRL-A! -Right-click the "Sheet 1" tab (or whatever Sheet #) at the bottom of the sheet and select View Code. -Paste the text in the new window in the Visual Basic text edit window. -Select Run Run Sub/User Form from the menu. -Go back to the Excel sheet and your selected cells should be all CAPS! Just a note, DON'T SELECT ALL (CTRL-A), just select the cells that contain your data. Select All ties up Excel for a looooooong time because the code is run on every possible cell, and there are a lot of cells. PS. Ron Carr had asked about Upper Case as text is entered, and I think he got his answer. Then *I* asked about Upper Case after text is entered and saved. So both of us got our answer! Thank you so much! *** Sent via Developersdex http://www.developersdex.com *** |
UPPER function problem
Michael
Thanks for the feedback. A revision to your instructions to other readers. I would not put the Macro in a worksheet module............those are best reserved for with event code which the first set of code was. The code I posted is a manually run macro and should go into a General module. Alt F11 to open the VBE. CTRL " r to open Project Explorer. Select your project/workbook and InsertModule. Place the macro in that module. Gord On Mon, 02 Mar 2009 17:08:16 -0800, Michael Bean wrote: Gord- Perfect! Thank you so much! I ran your code and my Excel sheet is in all CAPS now! In case other readers want a concise explanation, here's how I used the code with the instructions from earlier in this post. I hope this is correct: -Copy the code shown in Gord's post. -Select the cells you want to become all caps. DON'T USE CTRL-A! -Right-click the "Sheet 1" tab (or whatever Sheet #) at the bottom of the sheet and select View Code. -Paste the text in the new window in the Visual Basic text edit window. -Select Run Run Sub/User Form from the menu. -Go back to the Excel sheet and your selected cells should be all CAPS! Just a note, DON'T SELECT ALL (CTRL-A), just select the cells that contain your data. Select All ties up Excel for a looooooong time because the code is run on every possible cell, and there are a lot of cells. PS. Ron Carr had asked about Upper Case as text is entered, and I think he got his answer. Then *I* asked about Upper Case after text is entered and saved. So both of us got our answer! Thank you so much! *** Sent via Developersdex http://www.developersdex.com *** |
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